The acorn honey used for a published study was mistakenly listed as quercus pyrenaica and should be corrected to quercus species
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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAttribution-NonCommercial 4.0 Internationalhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/Tarih
2022Yazar
Koçyiğit, AbdurrahimAydoğdu, Gökhan
Balkan, Ezgi
Yenigün, Vildan Betül
Güler, Eray Metin
Bulut, Huri
Koktaşoğlu, Fatmanur
Gören, Ahmet Ceyhan
Atayoğlu, Ali Timuçin
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Koçyiğit, A., Aydoğdu, G., Balkan, E., Yenigün, V. B., Güler, E. M., Bulut, H. ... Atayoğlu, A. T. (2022). The acorn honey used for a published study was mistakenly listed as quercus pyrenaica and should be corrected to quercus species. Integrative Cancer Therapies, 21. http://doi.org/10.1177/15347354221110818Özet
A critical review letter1
was published concerning the article “Quercus pyrenaica honeydew honey effects on gastric
adenocarcinoma cells” published in Integrative Cancer
Therapies in 2019.2
According to the letter, the authors
reported that the Quercus pyrenaica mentioned in the study
was neither found in Mount Ida nor within the borders of
Turkey as stated in the study, therefore the results obtained
in the study may belong to another Quercus species.